We, Scientific Workers' Forum, some friendly organisations and individuals, have
taken an initiative to write a letter to the Chief Justice of India, Supreme
Court, New Delhi, expressing our concern over various issues sparked off by India's
recent test nuclear explosions.

We are enclosing a copy of the letter sent to the Chief Justice with the expectation
that you make use of it in whatever manner you consider fit, including the option
of sending similar letters to the Chief Justice with the request of taking up the
matter as one of great Interest of general Indian Public.

It may further be requested to you to circulate this appeal amongst your friends and friendly organisations
so that they may also take similar initiative. It may be communicated to the local
newspapers & other media as well.

To
The Honourable Chief Justice of India
Supreme Court
New Delhi 110 001

In the matter of :
Protection of the Indian People's Fundamental Right to Life and Personal Liberty
against the Physical, Environmental, Social, Psychological, Moral and Economic Consequences
of the Recent Test Explosions of Five Nuclear Devices by the Government of India
on 11 May 1998 and 13 May 1998 at Pokhran, Rajasthan, and against the Threats of
such Test in Future;
and against the Suppression of Facts in Relation to the said Test Explosions of Nuclear
Devices and its Future.

Honourable Sir,

We, the undersigned organizations and individuals from various walks of life seriously
concerned about the environment, society, health, education and rights of the Indian
people for some decades, humbly pray to you to protect the Indian People's Fundamental
Right to Life and Personal Liberty against the consequences of the recent test explosions
of five nuclear devices by the Government of India on 11 May 1998 and 13 May 1998
at Pokhran, Rajasthan.

We humbly bring the following facts in this regard to your Lordship's kind notice:

1. The diabolical, destructive and devastating environmental, physical, biological,
social, psychological and economic consequences of the nuclear explosions and its
preparation are now well-known to the concerned people of the world in all scientific
details.

2. The said consequences, both short term and long term, not only affect the
concerned adults of the present generation, but also the absolutely unconcerned population
and the children of the present and future generations for thousands of years.

3. Any test nuclear explosion is no exception in its effects, and its preparation
of that test uses the known dangerous chain of processes, from the manufacturing
of the necessary radioactive materials to the disposal of the radioactive wastes,
which is already established as the threats to the human and natural environments.

4. The consequences of the preparation and test of nuclear devices are not
known to the majority of the people of India, and the consequences of the present
test explosions are never disclosed to them by the Government of India.

5. Even all the time, the Government of India is trying to suppress the data
and factual information regarding the preparation and test of the present nuclear
devices.

6. Thus the acts of the Government of India regarding the present nuclear
test explosions go to cause threats and damage to the life and liberty of the Indian
people, who are mostly ignorant of the short term and long term effects of these
nuclear test explosions and its preparation.

7. Only some immediate material loss, physical reaction and mental shocks
of the people residing very near to the present site of test nuclear explosions,
are reported in the newspapers (xerox copies of selected reports are annexed hereto
and marked `A').

8. In 1956, to oppose all kinds of nuclear explosions, including test explosions,
the Government of India published a great book "NUCLEAR EXPLOSIONS AND THEIR
EFFECTS" (Publication Division, Government of India, 1956, revised edition 1958),
prepared by the scientists of the Defense Science Organization, with the foreword
by the then Honourable Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. This book presented most
important physical and biological consequences of low and high yield nuclear explosions
in details, and the book became famous in the peace-loving world and was translated
into several languages in different countries.

9. In 1956, the then Honourable Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru expressed
the principle of the Government of India, against all nuclear explosions including
test explosions, in the Foreword of the above book by the following words:

"But even without war we have what are called nuclear test explosions which,
in some measure, spread this evil thing over large parts of the world. These explosions
continue in spite of the dangers inherent in them.
I trust that this study, brief and incomplete as it is, will be of some use in directing
people's minds to the dreadful prospect of war in the nuclear age and to the dangers
of continuing nuclear test explosions."

10. Any change of Politics and Prime Ministers of the Government of India
could not change the inherent danger of the nuclear explosions including test explosions,
and the present Government of India acted in a manner absolutely against its own
principle of peace and healthy environment, and against the Indian people's fundamental
right to life and personal liberty guaranteed by the Constitution of India, by never
directing people's minds to the dangers of continuing nuclear test explosions.

11. After the publication of the above book in 1956-58 by the Government of
India, more and more facts about the dangers and hazards of nuclear test explosions,
particularly underground test explosions, have been reported in various scientific
studies.

12. For instance, an underground test explosion was carried out by the United
States of America on 10 December 1961 with the detonation of a 5 kiloton nuclear
device 1216 feet underground at a test site 25 miles southeast of Carlsbad, New Mexico,
exploded in an 8-by-10 feet chamber cut into a strata of rock salt, produced pressure
greater than expected, and it rocked the surrounding desert floor and caused clouds
of intensely radioactive steam to escape from the mouth of a vertical shaft connected
with the detonation chamber by 1000 feet tunnel, where radioactivity reached 10,000
roentgens an hour (where as maximum safe exposure being half roentgen yearly) at
the shaft's mouth, and the Atomic Energy Commission of US closed nearby highways
and took other local precautions (reported in, for example, Grace M. Ferrara (Ed):
Atomic Energy and the Safety Controversy, Facts On File, New York, 1978, at page
147).

13. In both the cases of nuclear test explosions in 1974 and 1998, the Government
of India neither gave prior information to the people nor published any detailed
and necessary report about the nuclear test explosions, which happened to be urgent
to assess the risks and dangers in these explosions, and never disclosed the fate
of the people affected thereby.

14. The Government of India cannot legally suppress the necessary information
and data about the preparation and consequences of the nuclear test explosions in
1974 and 1998, in the name of `security' of India.

15. Where the life and personal liberty of the people are in danger, then
the right to life and personal liberty of the people could be better protected by
the disclosure of the information and data about the preparation and consequences
of the nuclear test explosions in 1974 and 1998, and the disclosure of security strategy
of the Government of India in relation to the same.

16. In the case of 'New York Times Company vs. United States' [403 US 713(1971)],
about the publication of the secret Pentagon Papers in relation to the Vietnam war
in the newspapers, the Honourable Supreme Court of US observed :
"The word "security" is a broad, vague generality whose contours should
not be invoked to abrogate the fundamental law embodied in the First Amendment. The
guarding of military and diplomatic secrets at the expense of informed representative
government provides no real security for our Republic ."

Thus their Lordships allowed the disclosure of the secret papers of the US Government
in relation to the Vietnam war.

17. Though on 6 November 1971, the special session of the Honourable Supreme
Court of US voted (4-3) against a last minute brief filed by the Committee for Nuclear
Responsibility and seven other environmental, anti-war and American Indian groups
asking for a postponement of the most powerful underground nuclear test on the Alaskan
Island, by the order of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, the Atomic
Energy Commission (US) released 187 pages of secret documents, including the secret
memorandum questioning the safety of the underground test. [vide, Grace M. Ferrara,
(Ed): op.cit. pages 153-4]

18. Prior to the test nuclear explosion both in 1974 and 1998, the residents
near the site of the underground test explosions were never informed of the actual
happenings and its consequences, including the immediate earthquake following the
explosions, and thus the neighbourhood people were deprived of their right to life
and personal liberty illegally and unconstitutionally, and deceived by the Government
of India.

19. In the same way, the entire people of India were deprived of their right
to life and personal liberty and deceived by the Government of India, as the entire
people were not informed of the actual happenings and its consequences of the test
nuclear explosions beforehand.

20. The Government of India acted above the Constitution and Constitutional
Rights of the people, which should be subjected to the judicial review.

21. The decision of the Government of India to make nuclear bombs depriving
the people of their Constitutional Rights should be subjected to the judicial review,
particularly the entire chain of processes to make a nuclear bomb from the mining
of the radioactive materials to the disposal of radioactive waste.

22. Any special act or, ordinance giving power to the Government of India
to act against the Fundamental Rights of the people is ultra vires.

23. The Government of India is liable to compensate the damage caused to the
local people of Pokhran and others, by the test nuclear explosions of 1974 and 1998.

24. The Government of India is to conduct a comprehensive survey on the consequences
of the test nuclear explosions, of 1974 and 1998.

25. The Government of India is to disclose the strategy secrets which allegedly
compelled it to make nuclear bombs and its test explosions.

26. As one of the most important decisions in the history of humanitarian
law, environmental law and human rights law, to outlaw the threats or use of nuclear
weapons, the International Court of Justice on 8 July 1996, observed [in Para 87]:

"87. Finally, the Court points to the Martens Clause, whose continuing existence
and applicability is not to be doubted, as an affirmation that the principles and
rules of humanitarian law apply to nuclear weapons."

27. All these above facts are brought to your Lordship's kind notice with
our strong faith in the observation of this Honourable Supreme Court regarding the
people's right to life and personal liberty, that :

"The compulsion of constitutional humanism and the assumption of full faith
in life and liberty cannot be so futile or fragmentary that any transient legislative
majority in tantrums against any minority, by the three quick readings of a bill
with requisite quorum, can prescribe any unreasonable modality and thereby sterilize
the grandiloquent mandate.... ..In India, because of poverty and illiteracy, the
people are unable to protect and defend their rights; observance of fundamental rights
is not regarded as good politics and their transgression as a bad politics."
[Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, (1978) 2 S.C.R.621]

In the circumstances, we humbly pray to your Lordship that this Honourable Supreme
Court may kindly pass any order or orders:

a) To stay any further test nuclear explosion by the government of India;

b) To stay all official propaganda by the Government of India, in support
of the test nuclear explosions and nuclear devices or bombs;

c) To compel the Government of India to disclose all the facts regarding the
test nuclear explosions;

d) To compel the Government of India to compensate the damage already caused
to the people residing near the site of the test nuclear explosions of 1974 and 1998;

e) To investigate the consequences of the preparation and test explosions
of the nuclear bombs;

f) To review the entire chain of processes of manufacturing nuclear devices,
from Uranium mining to the disposal of the radioactive wastes;

g) To review the Governmental actions in relation to the test nuclear explosions;

h) To review the discretionary powers of the Government of the India regarding
nuclear bombs and its test explosions;

i) To declare any Act or Acts or Ordinance, by which the Government of India
supposed to be empowered to act contrary to the Constitutional Rights of the Indian
people, as ultra vires.

j) To stop production of all nuclear arms by the Government of India.

We, further pray to your Lordship to hear us and give us a chance to clarify our
above submissions in details.